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See also: ancient See also: town of See also: Palestine, S.E. of See also: Samaria, which first appears in See also: history as the place where See also: Jacob and his See also: family settled for a while (Gen. xxxiii
.
18; cf
.
See also: John iv
.
12)
.
It was occupied then by
See also: Hivites (Gen. xxxiv
.
2), and a tragedy took place in connexion with the chieftain's violation of Jacob's daughter Dinah
.
It was set apart as a city of See also: refuge (Jos. xx
.
7) and was occupied by the Kohathite See also: Levites in the tribe of See also: Ephraim (xxi
.
21)
.
Here, between Ebal and See also: Gerizim, See also: Joshua made his last speech to the elders of the Israelites (Jos. See also: xxiv
.
1)
.
The See also: mother of Abimelech the son of Gideon was a Shechemite, and See also: Shechem was the centre of his See also: short-lived See also: kingdom (See also: Jud. viii
.
31, ix.) . Here Rehoboam made the foolish speech which kindled the revolt of the N. kingdom (1See also: Kings xii
.
I),. after which it was for a See also: time the headquarters of Jeroboam (1 Kings xii
.
25)
.
Shechem was evidently a See also: holy place in remote antiquity
.
The " See also: oak " under which Jacob hid his teraphim (Gen. See also: xxxv
.
4) was doubtless a sacred See also: tree, as there the images (which it was not seemly to bring on a pilgrimage to Beth-el) would be safe
.
The See also: god of the Canaanite city was See also: Baal-Berith: his See also: temple was destroyed when Abimelech quelled the rising of his fickle subjects (Jud. ix
.
4, 46)
.
A See also: great See also: standing See also: stone under an oak-tree here was traditionally associated with Joshua's last speech (Jos. xxiv
.
26)
.
During the latter
See also: part of the See also: Hebrew See also: monarchy we hear nothing of Shechem, no doubt on account of the commanding importance of the neighbouring city of Samaria
.
It no doubt, owed its subsequent development to the destruction of Samaria and the rise in the See also: district surrounding of the Samaritan nation founded on the colonists settled by See also: Sargon and Assurbani-See also: pal
.
To See also: Josephus it was " the new city " by the inhabitants called Mabortha (B
.
J., IV. viii
.
1), but the official name Neapolis or Flavia Ncapolis, so called to commemorate its restoration by See also: Vespasian (Titus Flavius Vespasianus), soon became universal, and is still preserved in the See also: modern name Nablus—a See also: signal exception to the general See also: rule that the place-names of Palestine, whenever disturbed by See also: foreign influence, usually revert in time to the old Semitic nomenclature
.
There was a bishopric at Neapolis during the See also: Byzantine See also: period, and an attack made by the See also: Samaritans on the See also: bishop (See also: Pentecost, A.D
.
474) was punished by the emperor See also: Zeno, who gave Gerizim to the Christians
.
It was captured by the crusaders under See also: Tancred soon after the See also: conquest of Jerusalem (1099); they held it till 1184, when they lost it to Saladin
.
The See also: principal mosque of the town is a See also: church of the crusaders converted to
See also: Mahommedan worship
.
Towards the end of the 18th century it was the See also: head-quarters of the turbulent See also: sheikh Kasim el-Ahmad
.
In 1834 the soldiers of See also: Ibrahim See also: Pasha pillaged it
.
Nablus is now the chief town of a subdivision of the province of See also: Beirut
.
It lies in the valley between Ebal and Gerizim, on the See also: main See also: caravan route from Jerusalem northward
.
The situation . is famous for its beauty . There are about 24,000 inhabitants—all Moslems except about 15o Samaritans and perhaps 700 Christians . The inhabitants are notorious for fanaticism and lawlessness, and Europeans are usually greeted with vile epithets . There are See also: missions, both See also: Protestant and See also: Roman Catholic; and an important hospital under the auspices of the Church Missionary Society
.
There is a flourishing See also: trade in See also: soap, which is here manufactured, and a considerable commerce in wool and See also: cotton with the regions E. of the' See also: Jordan
.
In the neighbourhood of Nablus are shown: (I) a modern See also: building which covers the traditional site of the See also: tomb of See also: Joseph, as accepted by Jews, Samaritans and Christians
.
The authority for the See also: burial of Joseph at Shechem is the speech of See also: Stephen (Acts vii
.
16), though Josephus places the sepulchre at See also: Hebron (See also: Ant
.
II. viii
.
2)
.
Moslem tradition also regards Shechem as the burial-place of Joseph; but it appears as though the actual site, as shown, has not been always in one unvarying spot
.
(2) The well of Jacob, about a mile and a See also: half from Nablus on the way to Jerusalem, which is an excavation of great See also: depth
.
The tradition fixing this hallowed place seems to have been See also: constant throughout the whole of the Christian centuries, and it is one of the very few " holy places " shown to travellers and pilgrims in Palestine, the authenticity of which deserves consideration
.
It is one of the small number of sites mentioned by the See also: Bordeaux See also: pilgrim (A.D
.
333)
.
The site of the sacred oak has been sought at two places: one called El-'Amud, " the See also: column "—where is " Joseph's tomb "; and the other at Balata (a name containing the consonants of the Semitic word for " oak "), near Jacob's well
.
(R
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A
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